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Transcript
Chapter 25: World War II, 1941–1945
Chapter Review
I. AMERICAN COMMUNITIES Los Alamos, New Mexico
On Monday, July 16, 1945, the first atomic bomb was detonated at Los Alamos, NM.
Begun in 1941, the secret Manhattan Project headed by J. Robert Oppenheimer had spent
more than three years and billions of dollars to design, build, and produce the first atomic
bomb. Even while working in strict secrecy, the thousands of scientists and technicians at
Los Alamos and other sites were part of the great economic and social mobilization of the
war. Millions moved to the South and southwest coasts for war work, breaking up old
communities and creating new ones that would outlast the war and set the stage for
America’s emergence as a postwar superpower.
II. THE COMING OF WORLD WAR II
The depression helped undermine an already shaky political world as unrest spread across
Europe and Asia, international trade dropped by as much as two-thirds, and unemployment
rose. As militaristic regimes sprang up to threaten the peace, FDR had no clear foreign policy
plans, while most Americans opposed foreign entanglements. Yet the United States would
discover it would have no choice in being pulled into war.
MHL video: American Entry into WWI at www.myhistorylab.com
a. The Shadows of War Across the Globe
After seizing Manchuria in 1931, in 1937 militarist leaders in Japan provoked full-scale war
by brutally invading China. Meanwhile, the rise of authoritarian nationalism in Italy and
Germany cast a dark shadow over Europe. In Germany the National Socialists (Nazis), led by
Adolf Hitler, combined militaristic rhetoric with a racist doctrine of Aryan (Nordic)
supremacy that classified nonwhites and Jews as “degenerate races.” After becoming
chancellor in 1933, Hitler renounced the Versailles treaty and began rearming while pursuing
a quest for Lebensraum in central Europe. After annexing Austria, Hitler turned to
Czechoslovakia. Rather than face war, England and France agreed at the September 1938
Munich Conference to allow Germany to annex the Sudetenland, a part of Czechoslovakia
bordering Germany. In return, Hitler pledged to stop his territorial advance. Less than six
months later, in March 1939, Hitler seized the rest of Czechoslovakia. Meanwhile, German
Jews were stripped of citizenship and terrorized by the Nazi-sponsored Kristallnacht attacks
on homes and businesses. In September 1940, Germany, Italy, and Japan signed a Tripartite
Pact, pledging to “stand by” each other.
MHL image: Nazi Book Bonfire at www.myhistorylab.com
b. Roosevelt Readies for War
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World War I had left a legacy of strong isolationist sentiment in the United States, a
sentiment with strong support in Congress. In 1935 Congress passed the first of five
Neutrality Act restricting trade with belligerents. The threat of war led to a relaxation,
permitting arms sales to Britain, France, and China in 1939, but when war broke out with
Hitler’s September invasion of Poland, the American public continued to oppose active
U.S. involvement. In 1940, Hitler crushed France and began the Battle of Britain. Arms
sales to Britain grew and a peacetime draft was instituted, but the election of 1940 forced
FDR to pledge not to send American boys to war. But once reelected, he pushed for
passage of the Lend-Lease Act with open aid to Britain and, in August 1941 met with
British Prime Minister Churchill to draft the Atlantic Charter, a statement of war aims
that made greater U.S. involvement inevitable. When Hitler invaded the neutral Soviet
Union in June 1941, American aid to Britain accelerated, with armed American convoy
authorized to “sink on sight” German U-boats.
c. Pearl Harbor
While the American government and public watched the unfolding of the war in Europe
with dread, the war in Asia went on. To protect Asian interests, Roosevelt transfered the
Pacific fleet from bases in California to Pearl Harbor, Hawai’i, in May 1940. As
diplomatic and economic relations deteriorated, the Japanese leaders decided to make a
first strike that might keep America out of war or at least shake the country so that it
would not resist Japanese expansion. Although the Japanese diplomatic code had been
broken, the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor caught American forces completely
off guard. On December 8, declaring the attack on Pearl Harbor a day that “will live in
infamy,” Roosevelt asked Congress for a declaration of war against Japan. The United
States had not yet declared war on Japan’s European allies, but Hitler made that
inevitable when he asked the Reichstag on December 11 to support war against the “half
Judaized, the other half Negrified” American nation. World War II now began for
Americans.
MHL document: Franklin Roosevelt, Date Which Will Live in Infamy (1941) at
www.myhistorylab.com
III. A GREAT ARSENAL OF DEMOCRACY
By the time the United States entered World War II, the U.S. economy had already been regeared for military purposes. In a 1940 “fireside chat,” Roosevelt called upon all Americans
to make the nation a “great arsenal of democracy.” Once the United States entered World
War II, the federal government poured an unprecedented amount of energy and money into
wartime production and assigned a huge army of experts to manage it. The Great Depression
suddenly, it seemed, ended.
a. Mobilizing for War
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A few days after the United States declared war on Germany, Congress passed the War
Powers Act, which established a precedent for executive authority that would endure long
after the war’s end. Roosevelt promptly created special wartime agencies. The National
War Labor Board (NWLB) mediated disputes between labor and management. The War
Manpower Commission (WMC) directed the mobilization of military and civilian
services. Other agencies oversaw prices and production of domestic goods. Most
significantly, the Office of Scientific Research and Development was charged with
applying science to the war effort, yielding better radar, more effective pesticides and
medicines and improved weapons. The federal government also sponsored various
measures to prevent subversion of the war effort, including an enlarged FBI with
sweeping and often illegal domestic surveillance powers.
Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr. encouraged Americans to buy
government bonds to finance the war and planned a campaign “to use bonds to sell the
war, rather than vice versa.” Government’s size and cost grew enormously during a war
that cost $250 million a day to fight. Many New Deal programs withered away as “Dr.
New Deal” became “Dr. Win the War.” While the REA and Farm Security
Administration survived, the CCC and WPA disappeared with the shift to war work
virtually ending unemployment.
b. Organizing the War Economy
The country enjoyed many advantages to meet this challenge: a large industrial base,
abundant natural resources (largely free from interference by the war), and a civilian
population large enough to permit it to increase both its labor force and its armed forces.
By the summer of 1941 the federal government was pouring vast amounts into defense
production. Facing war orders too large to fill, American industries were now primed for
all-out production. No wonder the actual volume of industrial output expanded at the
fastest rate in American history. Military production alone grew from 2 percent of the
1939 total gross national product to 40 percent of the 1943 total. Defense production
transformed entire regions. The economic boom lifted entire populations out of
sharecropping and tenancy into well-paid industrial jobs in the cities and pumped
unprecedented profits into southern business. Much like large-scale commercial
agriculture, many big businesses did well during the war, many scoring huge profits from
military contracts. The 100 largest corporations, which manufactured 30 percent of all
goods in 1940, garnered 70 percent of all war and civilian contracts and the bulk of the
war profits.
c. New Workers
The war boosted employment for minorities—200,000 Mexican braceros. Southwestern
farm workers, as well as Native Americans recruited for construction work. African
Americans found increased opportunities in war industries, and overall black
employment grew from 2.9 to 3.8 million. The female labor force grew by 50 percent,
especially for white women over 35, many of them married.
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Neither government nor industry rushed to recruit women, nor expected women to stay in
their jobs when the war ended. Posters and informational films depicted women’s new
industrial jobs as simple variations of domestic tasks. “Instead of cutting a cake,” one
newsreel explained, “this woman [factory worker] cuts the pattern of aircraft parts.” The
number of women automobile workers, for example, jumped from 29,000 to 200,000,
and women electrical workers from 100,000 to 374,000. While wartime wages grew 50
percent, profits grew even faster. Unions grew apace, from 10.5 to 14.7 million members,
including 1.25 million black members. Unions pledged not to strike in exchange for
better wages and working conditions, but wildcat strikes plagued mining and other
industries as wartime strikes rose to the highest level of any four-year period in American
history.
MHL image: Women Riveters in Navy Shipyard at www.myhistorylab.com
IV. THE HOME FRONT
Although battle did not touch the United States directly, the war still affected American
society. Alongside an upsurge of patriotism ran deep conflicts on the home front.
Families were disrupted and racial and ethnic hostilities flared repeatedly and on several
occasions erupted in violence.
a. Families in Wartime
Despite the uncertainties of wartime, or perhaps because of them, men and women rushed
into marriage, and, often, immediate separation. Although wartime wages soared, so did
rents, and rationing meant careful planning was needed to prepare meals and buy
clothing, gasoline, and other staples in short supply—sometimes from a flourishing black
market when rationed goods or stamps ran out.
The care of small children became a major problem for working mothers. Although the
War Manpower Commission estimated that as many as 2 million children needed some
form of child care, federally funded day-care centers served less than 10 percent of
defense workers’ children. Juvenile delinquency rose during the war. With employers
often relaxing minimum age requirements for employment, many teenagers quit school
for the high wages of factory jobs. Runaways drifted from city to city, finding temporary
work at wartime plants or at military installations. Public health improved greatly during
the war as Americans could again afford to visit the doctor and ate fruits and vegetables
raised in backyard “victory gardens.” The death rate in 1942, excluding battle deaths, was
the lowest in the nation’s history, although the rural South and Southwest continued to
suffer high infant and maternal mortality rates.
b. The Internment of Japanese Americans
After the attack on Pearl Harbor, many Americans feared an invasion of the mainland and
suspected Japanese Americans of disloyalty. A coalition of politicians, patriotic
organizations, business groups, and military officials called for the removal of all
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Americans of Japanese descent from Pacific coastal areas despite a State Department
report certifying their loyalty. FDR’s executive order in February 1942 authorized the
relocation of 120,000 Japanese Americans to interior internment camps in isolated areas,
often with only the barest provisions for shelter and furnishings,
The Japanese American Citizens League charged that “racial animosity” rather than
military necessity had dictated the internment policy. In protest, nearly 6,000 Japanese
Americans renounced their U.S. citizenship. In Korematsu v. U.S. (1944) the Supreme
Court upheld the relocation on grounds of national security. Japanese Americans lost
homes and businesses valued at $500 million in what many historians judge as being the
worst violation of American civil liberties during the war. Not until 1988 did Congress
vote reparations and a public apology.
MHL document: Executive Order 9066 (1942) at www.myhistorylab.com
c. “Double V”: Victory at Home and Abroad
African American activists conducted a wartime “Double V” campaign, mobilizing for
Allied victory and their own rights as citizens demanding fair housing and equal
employment opportunities, laying the foundation for the postwar civil rights movement.
Facing a threatened African American March on Washington organized by A. Phillip
Randolph to protest discrimination, on June 25, 1941, FDR issued Executive Order 8802,
banning discrimination in defense industries and government. Randolph called off the
march but remained determined to “shake up white America.”
Other civil rights organizations formed during wartime to fight both discrimination and
Jim Crow practices, including segregation in the U.S. armed forces. The interracial
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) formed by pacifists in 1942 staged sit-ins at
Chicago, Detroit, and Denver restaurants that refused to serve African Americans, while
NAACP membership soared from 50,000 in 1940 to 450,000 in 1946. “Hate strikes”
broke out in defense plants across the country when African Americans were hired or
upgraded to positions customarily held by white workers, while whites protested blacks
moving into housing in many cities. In the summer of 1943, a violent riot broke out in
Detroit along with conflicts in more than 50 other cities. As Langston Hughes wrote,
blacks were willing to fight Hitler and Jim Crow at the same time.
MHL document: A. Philip Randolph, Why Should We March (1942) at
www.myhistorylab.com
d. Zoot-Suit Riots
On the night of June 4, 1943, sailors launched attacks on East L.A. Mexican Americans
dressed in zoot suits. Mexican American teenagers wearing long-draped coats, pegged
pants, pocket watches with oversized chains, and big floppy hats outraged the sailors to
whom the zoot suit signaled defiance and a lack of patriotism.
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The zoot-suiters, however, represented less than 10 percent of their community’s youth.
More than 300,000 Mexican Americans were serving in the armed forces (a greater
proportion of their draft-age population than other Americans), and they served in the
most hazardous branches, as paratroopers and in the Marine Corps. For the first time
Mexican Americans were finding well-paying jobs, and, like African Americans, they
expected their government to protect them from discrimination.
Military and civilian authorities eventually contained the zoot-suit riots by ruling
several sections of Los Angeles off-limits to military personnel, and the city council
passed legislation making the wearing of a zoot suit in public a criminal offense.
e. Popular Culture and “The Good War”
With money in their pockets, Americans spent freely at vacation resorts, country clubs,
racetracks, nightclubs, dance halls, and movie theaters. Sales of books skyrocketed, and
spectator sports attracted huge audiences. Transplanted southern musicians, black and
white, brought their regional styles to northern cities, paving the way for postwar rhythm
and blues and rock and roll. Many popular songs featured war themes, promoting a
“good war” and justifying personal sacrifice. Wartime movies likewise played up
soldiers’ heroism and extolled our Allies, including the previously suspect Soviet Union,
and movie stars led war bond drives. Patriotic Americans, such as civil defense
volunteers and Red Cross workers, dressed in uniforms, and women employed in defense
plants wore pants, often for the first time. Production of nylon stockings was halted
because the material was needed for parachutes; women’s skirts were shortened, while
the War Production Board encouraged cuffless “Victory Suits” for men. While some of
these responses were spontaneous, the Office of War Information spread the messages of
patriotism and sacrifice with posters while reviewing music, films ads, and radio
programs to make sure everyone got the message. The joint sense of participation and
patriotism left a generation of Americans with memories of WW II as “the good war” and
a time of closer community.
V. MEN AND WOMEN IN UNIFORM
World War II mobilized 16.4 million Americans into the armed forces. Whether working in
the steno pool at Great Lakes Naval Training Center in northern Illinois or slogging through
mud with rifle in hand in the Philippines, many men and women saw their lives reshaped in
unpredictable ways. For those who survived, the war often proved to be the defining
experience of their lives.
MHL audio: Soldier Boy Blues, 1943 at www.myhistorylab.com
a. Creating the Armed Forces
In 1939 only 200,000 men served in the armed forces. After October 1940, draft
registration was compulsory for all men between 18 and 36. The draft law exempted
about 25,000 conscientious objectors who by religious training or belief opposed war
who served in noncombatant roles in the military services; another 12,000 performed
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“alternative service.” Surprising numbers were refused induction because they were
physically unfit for military service or illiterate. The officer corps, exemplified by Gen.
Douglas MacArthur, was highly professional, politically conservative, and personally
autocratic. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, however, supreme commander of the Allied
forces in Europe, projected a new and contrasting spirit. The democratic rhetoric of the
war and the sudden massive expansion of the armed forces contributed to this
transformation of the officer corps. A shortage of officers during World War I had
prompted a huge expansion of the Reserve Officer Training Corps, but it still could not
meet the demand for trained officers. Racing to make up for the deficiency, Army Chief
of Staff George Marshall opened schools for officer candidates, producing 54,000
graduates in 1942. Most GIs had little contact with the high command, though, and
dedication to their unit was at the heart of military loyalty rather than political ideology.
Most of all, soldiers were motivated to get the job done and get home as soon as possible.
b. Women Enter the Military
In May 1942 the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC), later changed to Women’s
Army Corps (WAC), was created, joined in 1942–43 by the Navy WAVES, the Women’s
Air Force Service Pilots, and the Marine Corps Women’s Reserve. Approximately
350,000 women served in World War II, two-thirds of them in the WACS and WAVES.
Although barred from combat, women were not necessarily protected from danger.
Nurses accompanied combat troops, treated men under fire, and dug and lived in their
own foxholes. More than 1,000 women flew planes, although not in combat missions.
The vast majority in clerical and other “women’s” jobs served at home, far from the
front. The overwhelming majority of soldiers believed that most WACS were
prostitutes, and the War Department itself, fearing “immorality” or homosexuality
among women in the armed forces, closely monitored their conduct and established
much stricter rules for women than for men.
c. Old Practices and New Horizons
The draft brought hundreds of thousands of young black men into the army and others
enlisted at a rate 60 percent higher than the general population. By 1944, black soldiers
represented 10 percent of the army’s troops, and overall approximately 1 million African
Americans served in the armed forces during World War II, most in segregated, poorly
equipped noncombat units commanded by white officers although the Tuskegee Airmen
and the all-black 761st Tank Battalion were exceptions. They encountered discrimination
everywhere, from the army canteen to the religious chapels. The year 1943 marked the
peak of unrest, with violent confrontations between blacks and whites breaking out at
military installations, especially in the South, where the majority of African American
soldiers were stationed. The army also grouped Japanese Americans into segregated
units, sending most to fight far from the Pacific theater. Better educated than the average
soldier, many Nisei soldiers who knew Japanese served stateside as interpreters and
translators and Navajos were recruited as “code talkers” in the Pacific. For Jews and
other second generation immigrants, army service was a profoundly “Americanizing”
experience. Despite rules barring them from service, many homosexuals enlisted and the
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pressures of war gave opportunities to express their sexuality more openly in a situation
where even straight men danced with each other at canteens for lack of female partners.
For most veterans, the war was remembered as the greatest experience of their lives, and
by serving with men from diverse backgrounds and regions, they came to recognize “the
bigness and wholeness of the United States.”
MHL video: The Desegregation of the Military and Blacks in Combat at
www.myhistorylab.com
d. The Medical Corps
For the soldiers fighting in hot humid jungles, malaria, typhus, diarrhea, or dengue fever
posed the most common threat to their lives, while all combat troops faced the perils of
“combat fatigue” (known today as post-traumatic stress disorder). In 1944, the army
concluded that eight months in combat was the maximum and instituted a rotation system
to relieve exhausted soldiers.
To care for sick and wounded soldiers, the army depended on a variety of medical
personnel. Soldiers received first aid training as part of basic training, and carried
bandages to treat minor wounds. The Army Medical Corps sent doctors to the front lines.
Of the soldiers who underwent emergency surgery on the field, more than 85 percent
survived, due both to improved surgical methods and “wonder drugs” like penicillin.
Blood transfusion and use of dried plasma helped reduce shock from blood loss. Soldiers
considered medics the true heroes of the battlefront, giving aid under fire on the front
lines. American nurses—given military rank and professional status—supplied the bulk
of care to recovering soldiers. By 1945, approximately 56,000 women, including 500
African American women, were on active duty in the Army Nurse Corps, staffing
medical facilities in every theater of the war.
VI. THE WORLD AT WAR
Through 1942, Hitler’s forces controlled Europe, pounding England and driving deep into
Russia and across northern Africa to take the Suez Canal. Things were little better in the
Pacific, where Japanese planes struck the main U.S. base in the Philippines and demolished
half the air force commanded by General Douglas MacArthur forcing U.S. troops to
withdraw to the Bataan Peninsula, admitting that Japan had practically seized the Pacific.
Roosevelt called the news “all bad,” and his military advisers predicted a long fight to victory
(see Map 25.1). But the Allies enjoyed several important advantages: vast natural resources
and a skilled workforce with sufficient reserves to accelerate the production of weapons and
ammunitions; the determination of millions of antifascists throughout Europe and Asia; and
the capacity of the Soviet Union to endure immense losses.
MHL map: World War II, European Theater at www.myhistorylab.com
a. Soviets Halt Nazi Drive
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Unlike World War I, which was fought by immobile armies kept in trenches by bursts of
machine-gun fire, World War II was a war of offensive maneuvers punctuated by surprise
attacks with armored vehicles, automatic weapons, high-explosive artillery shells, and air
power, all aided by better radio communications between commanders and their troops.
After June 1941, the burden of the war fell increasingly on the Soviet Union. After initial
and bloody defeats, the Soviets rallied, cutting German supply lines and launching a
massive counterattack in the winter of 1941–42, catching the freezing German troops off
guard. The Soviets suffered more casualties than Americans did during the entire war. By
February 1943, the German Sixth Army had met defeat, overpowered by Soviet troops
and weapons aided by American Lend-Lease supplies. Nazi officers and German
civilians alike began to doubt that Hitler could win the war. The Soviet victories had
turned the tide of the war, but the Americans and British faced increasing Soviet demands
to open a second front to relieve the German pressure, an immense and complex that took
far longer to launch than the Soviets expected.
b. Planning and Initiating the Allied Offensive
During 1942 the Axis offensive stalled, with German defeat at Stalingrad and Japanese
failures in the Pacific. As American war production ramped up and as the U-boat threat in
the Atlantic was blunted, Allied war materials outstripped Axis resources, ending the
Battle of Britain and putting the Luftwaffe on the defensive. Some military leaders and
the American public called for avenging Pearl Harbor; FDR and Churchill decided to
focus on defeating Germany first. After disagreements on where to open a second front,
the Allies compromised by launching an invasion of North Africa. After bitter fighting
from Egypt to Morocco, Rommel’s Afrika Korps was defeated by early 1943. Meeting in
Casablanca in January, FDR and Churchill—in Stalin’s absence—announced that nothing
short of unconditional Axis surrender would be accepted, promising a longer but
politically decisive war.
Aerial bombing picked up with British attacking at night and Americans employing day
raids. U.S. B-17 Flying Fortresses, while taking terrible losses from ground fire, hit war
plants and rail lines as well as civilian areas, with heavy loss of life. Anxious to hasten
the war’s end, the Royal Air Force began direct attacks on civilians, destroying Hamburg
and 60 other cities, culminating in the U.S.-British firebombing of Dresden in 1945
killing 135,000 civilians. The air war alone could not defeat the Axis, but German war
production was seriously disrupted and when the Allies invaded France in 1944 they held
total air superiority.
c. The Allied Invasion of Europe
During the summer of 1943, the Allies began to advance on southern Italy. Italy
surrendered to the Allies on September 8, but Hitler sent new divisions into northern Italy
and stalled the Allied campaign. When the European war ended, the German and Allied
armies were still battling on Italy’s rugged terrain.
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Facing extermination, Jews in the Warsaw ghetto rose in a futile but bloody rebellion in
the summer of 1943, while underground resistance fighters harassed the Nazis from
Greece to Norway and Poland to France, encouraged by Allied promises of a new
European offensive.
Stalin had long demanded a western invasion and Churchill’s doubts were finally
overcome as a huge American army gathered and trained in Britain under Eisenhower’s
command. The Allied invasion finally began on “D-Day,” June 6, 1944. Despite fierce
German resistance, over a million men landed in Normandy in the next six weeks and,
breaking through German lines, pushed the Nazis back. General Charles de Gaulle,
accompanied by Allied troops, arrived in Paris on August 25 to become president of the
reestablished French Republic. One occupied European nation after another now swiftly
fell to the Allied armies. But the Allied troops had only reached a resting place between
bloody battles.
d. The High Cost of European Victory
In September 1944, Allied commanders searched for a strategy to end the war quickly.
Faulty intelligence reports overlooked a well-armed German division at Arnhem,
Holland, waiting to cut Allied paratroopers to pieces. By the end of the battle, the
Germans had captured 6,000 Americans.
In a final, desperate effort to reverse the Allied momentum, Hitler directed his last
reserves, a quarter-million men, at Allied lines in the Belgian forest of the Ardennes. This
last effort—the bloodiest single campaign Americans had been involved in since the
battle of Gettysburg—exhausted the German capacity for counterattack. After Christmas
Day 1944, the Germans fell back, retreating into their own territory.
In March 1945, the Allies rolled across the Rhine and took the Ruhr Valley with its
precious industrial resources. Meanwhile, Soviet forces swept across Poland (standing
aside while the Nazis crushed a anti-Russian resistance in Warsaw) and reached the
outskirts of Berlin by April. The defense of Germany, now hopeless, had fallen into the
hands of young teenagers and elderly men.
e. The War in Asia and the Pacific
In May 1942, U.S. forces went on the offensive in the Pacific, first winning the Battle of
the Coral Sea, and then destroying a Japanese fleet preparing to attack Midway Island in
June. Naval aviation played a decisive role in these battles, and the loss of Japanese
planes and aircraft carriers crippled sea-born offensive operations. Even so, Japanese
troops swept across Burma and Thailand and dominated most of South East Asia with
systematic and terrifying cruelty. General McArthur and Admiral Nimitz shared the
American command in the Pacific, and settled on an “island hopping” offensive strategy
that began in 1942 with attacks in the Solomon Islands and New Guinea. On Guadalcanal
a bloody battle lasted for six months but proved the Japanese could be defeated. For the
next two years, navy, army and Marine forces slowly pushed towards the Japanese home
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islands at a high human cost on both sides. In 1944 as the Normandy campaign began,
Americans attacked the Marianas and the Philippines, culminating in the Battle of Leyte
Gulf in which the Japanese Navy was all but destroyed. Even so, Japan fought
tenaciously to defend Okinawa, utilizing kamikaze suicide attacks. By June 1945 the war
was over in Europe and Allied bombers were devastating Japanese cities. Japan could not
hold over forever, but the Western Allies pressed for a quick end to the war in part out of
fear of Soviet expansion, leading to the decision to use the atomic bomb on Japan.
MHL map: World War II, Pacific Theater at www.myhistorylab.com
VII.
THE LAST STAGES OF WAR
Until mid-1943, Roosevelt had focused on military strategy rather than on plans for peace.
With the defeat of Germany in sight, diplomatic objectives moved to the forefront. Roosevelt
wanted both to crush the Axis powers and to establish a system of collective security to
prevent another world war. He knew he could not succeed without the cooperation of the
other key leaders, Stalin and Churchill. During 1944 and 1945, the “Big Three” met to
hammer out the shape of the postwar world, not realizing how quickly the Grand Alliance
would fall apart in the face of these issues.
a. The Holocaust
As early as 1933, Hitler had begun planning a “final solution” to the “Jewish problem.”
Eventually 6 million Jews and millions of other “inferior” races and groups—Slavs,
Gypsies and homosexuals—were sent to labor and extermination camps, while millions
of civilians died under Nazi occupation. Although a few newspapers and magazines
reported on the growing Holocaust, the government made little mention of it, and by
1943 most Americans did not believe Hitler was systematically murdering Jews. When
leaders of the American Jewish community petitioned FDR for action, he refused,
arguing that the best way the Jews was to liberate all of Europe from the Nazis. Although
a War Refugees Board was established in 1944 to overcome State Department resistance
to Jewish immigration, Roosevelt still refused to take any direct action to aid civilians,
such as bombing rail lines leading to death camps. The extent of Nazi crimes was only
revealed when Allied troops began liberating the camps finding starving inmates, heaps
of corpses, and smoking crematoria. By April 1945, Americans began to know what they
had been fighting against, but it came far to late to stop it.
b. The Yalta Conference
Reelected to a fourth term in 1944 over Dewey, an exhausted and ill FDR faced the end
of the war, characteristically failing to take new Vice President Harry Truman into his
confidence. The 1941 Atlantic Charter stated noble objectives for the world after the
defeat of fascism: national self-determination, no territorial aggrandizement, equal
economic opportunities for all peoples, freedom of the seas, disarmament, and “freedom
from fear and want.” But neither Stalin nor Churchill seemed committed to its principles.
In February 1945, Roosevelt held his last meeting with them at Yalta on the Black Sea.
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Seeking cooperation, the president recognized postwar peace depended on compromise.
Neither the United States nor Great Britain resisted a Soviet occupation of the Baltic
states and part of Poland as a buffer against future German aggression. The controversial
issue was the Soviet entry into the Pacific war, which Roosevelt believed necessary for a
timely Allied victory. After driving a hard bargain involving rights to territory in China,
Stalin agreed to declare war against Japan within two or three months of Germany’s
surrender.
Roosevelt announced to Congress that the Yalta meeting had been a “great success,”
proof that the wartime alliance remained intact but privately doubted postwar
cooperation. When Roosevelt died of a massive stroke on April 12, 1945 peaceful
solutions to global problems cooperation among the Allied nations promised to become
much more difficult.
MHL document: Big Three at Yalta at www.myhistorylab.com
c. The Atomic Bomb
President Truman had none of FDR’s experience, finesse, and prestige. At Potsdam, in
July 1945, Truman met with Stalin and new British Prime Minister Clement Atlee to
address a range of thorny and divisive issues on which the Allies found little consensus.
At Potsdam, Truman learned of a successful atomic bomb test in New Mexico on July 16,
1945, the fruits of a program about which he had known nothing before becoming
president. Although Truman secured Stalin’s promise to join the war against Japan by
August 15, he also authorized atomic attacks that would make Russian forces
unnecessary. On August 6, 1945, a single bomb dropped from Enola Gay, a B-29,
destroyed Hiroshima and killed 140,000 or more people. When Japan refused to
surrender, a second bomb devastated Nagasaki on August 9, and Japan capitulated on
August 14. Although Truman never admitted any doubts or qualms about using the bomb
and insisted it was a purely military decision aimed at ending the war, others have
questioned the morality of atomic attacks. And the use of the bomb was in part intended
to intimidate the Soviets and establish a U.S. postwar dominance.
VIII. CONCLUSION
World War II was made incomparably more deadly than earlier wars by new weapons and
tactics, leading to massive military and civilian deaths. Although America suffered about a
million casualties, by comparison with Soviet losses and a worldwide toll of 40 to 50 million,
the United States came out of the war relatively unscathed. The war mobilized almost all
Americans, reinforced federal government power and forced the Unites States into world
leadership. With peace and prosperity after the war, Americans, many living in new
communities, looked forward with confidence and optimism into what would prove to be an
uncertain future.
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Learning Objectives:
Students should be able to answer the following questions after studying Chapter 25:
1. What steps did Roosevelt take in the late 1930s to prepare the United States for war?
2. How did the government marshal the nation’s resources to fight the war?
3. What major changes occurred in American society as a consequence of wartime
mobilization?
4. What role did women play in the armed forces during World War II?
5. What were the main elements of the Allied war strategy?
6. What were the factors behind the decision to deploy the atomic bomb against Japan?
Discussion Suggestions and Possible Answers
1. What were the reasons that during the 1930s so many Americans strongly opposed playing
an active role in foreign affairs?
Answer: Many Americans believed that the country’s involvement in World War I had been
the result of war profiteers and weapons manufacturers. Some Americans supported the antiSemitism of the Nazis, while others wanted to avoid American entanglement in another
overseas war, believing that involvement in World War I had been a mistake.
2. What were the Americans’ goals in WWII? Can you make a connection between those goals
and the goals in WWI?
Answer: In World War II, the United States sought to defeat Germany, Italy, and Japan,
while they pursued many of the larger goals that President Wilson had promoted after World
War I, including national self-determination, free trade, and open economic and diplomatic
relationships.
3. Most Americans believe that the United States won the war with a little help from the
Soviets. Most Russians believe the opposite. Which side is closer to the truth? Can you
anticipate that these differences of opinion could lead to problems after the war?
Answer: The United States could not have won the war in Europe without the assistance of
the Soviet Union. The Soviets suffered immensely greater casualties then did the United
States, and their success in stopping the Nazis at Stalingrad, leading to the loss or capture of
a major German Army, was crucial to the Allied Victory. Americans were more focused on
the efforts of American forces in North Africa, Italy, and then the D-Day invasion in France.
It is not surprising that the Soviets were eager to avoid another bloody conflict with
Germany, desiring a buffer of satellite states on its western border, while Americans
criticized the expansion of communism.
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4. In what ways did women and minorities benefit from their WWII experience? Can you
anticipate how this would lead to problems after the war?
Answer: Women entered the workforce in massive numbers as men left factories to join the
military. Industry propaganda compared factory labor to the domestic chores women had
responsibility for in the home. No one, however, expected women to remain in the workforce
once the war ended. Many other women joined the military auxiliaries, serving as nurses, in
clerical and communication positions, and in some noncombat flight missions. African
Americans promoted the “Double-V” campaign, victory over fascism abroad and racism at
home. African Americans took advantage of new opportunities in industry as well as the
military. President Roosevelt’s Executive Order 8802 barred discrimination in defense
industries. One million black Americans served in the armed forces during World War II, but
they endured segregation, poor equipment, and the taunts of white officers. Despite this,
military service proved to be a vital training ground for future civil rights activists.
5. Why were Japanese Americans singled out for special treatment? Why not German or Italian
Americans?
Answer: Japanese Americans were suspected of loyalty to the enemy rather then the United
States. They were barred from coastal areas, had their property seized and eventually faced
internment in camps in the interior of America. Although a few German and Italian
Americans were similarly interned, racial animosity against the Japanese dictated the
stronger measures taken against them, which have been called the greatest violation of civil
liberties in American history.
6. Harry Truman claimed that dropping the bomb saved half a million lives. Do you buy his
explanation?
Answer: President Truman sincerely believed that using the atomic bomb against Japan
would eliminate the need for an American invasion of the Japanese home islands, which was
likely to result in heavy American and Japanese casualties. He has been criticized, however,
for continuing to insist upon unconditional surrender, which was eventually dropped when
the United States allowed the Japanese Emperor to remain, albeit in a ceremonial position. In
addition, many believe that Truman also wanted to use the atomic bomb in order to
intimidate the Soviet Union, already on their way to becoming America’s global rival.
Lecture Outline
American Communities: Los Alamos, New Mexico
The Coming of World War II
Shadows of War Across the Globe: Europe and Asia
Roosevelt Readies for War
Pearl Harbor
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The Great Arsenal of Democracy
Mobilizing for War
Organizing the War Economy
New Workers: Women and Minorities
The Home Front
Families in Wartime
The Internment of Japanese Americans
“Double V”: Victory at Home and Abroad for African Americans
Zoot Suit Riots
Popular Culture and “The Good War”
Men and Women in Uniform
Creating the Armed Forces: The Draft and Conscientious Objectors
Women in the Military
African Americans and Segregated Service
The Medical Corps
The World at War
Soviet Union Stops the Nazis at Stalingrad
Allied Offensive in North Africa and Italy
D-Day: The Invasion of Normandy
The High Cost of Victory
The War in Asia and the Pacific: Naval Warfare and Island Hopping
The Last Stages of the War
The Nazi Holocaust
Failed Efforts to Call Attention to Genocide
Atlantic Charter and the Yalta Conference
Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb
Resources (Web, Films/Video)
Films/Video
The War (900 minutes). PBS Video, 2007. Epic documentary by Ken Burns that shows the
impact of the war on the entire nation by studying four American communities in great depth.
Saving Private Ryan (169 minutes). Dreamworks Video, 1999. Steven Spielberg’s account of the
invasion of Normandy creates a visually overpowering account of the horror of war.
Band of Brothers (705 minutes). HBO Video, 2002. A ten-part dramatic but historically
grounded miniseries following “Easy Company” of the 101st Airborne from Normandy to the
end of the European war.
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The Pacific (400 minutes). HBO Video, 2010. A ten-part dramatic but historically grounded
miniseries examining the Pacific war through the eyes of three Marines: Robert Leckie, John
Basilone, and Eugene Sledge (largely based on memoirs). A companion to Band of Brothers.
Zoot Suit Riots (55 minutes). PBS Video, 2002. Account of the zoot suit riots of Los Angeles
during World War II. The program highlights a variety of themes including teenage rebellion,
tensions between immigrant groups, World War II and the history of Mexicans in the United
States.
My History Lab Connections
Reinforce what you learned in this chapter by studying the many documents, images, maps,
review tools, and videos available at www.myhistorylab.com.
Read and Review
Read the Documents
Franklin Roosevelt, Date Which Will Live in Infamy (1941)
Executive Order 9066 (1942)
A. Philip Randolph, Why Should We March (1942)
See the Maps
World War II, European Theater
World War II, Pacific Theater
See the Images
Nazi Book Bonfire
Women Riveters in Navy Shipyard
Big Three at Yalta
See the Videos
American Entry into WWII
Research and Explore
Read the Documents
Exploring America: Propaganda
Whose History Is It?: Exhibiting the Enola Gay
Read the Biographies
Douglas MacArthur
A. Philip Randolph
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Hear the Audio
Soldier Boy Blues, 1943
Obey the Ration Laws
See the Video
Normandy Beach, June 6, 1944
The Desegregation of the Military and Blacks in Combat
Critical Thinking Exercises
The ranks of World War II survivors are thinning, but it should be possible to find enough of
them to conduct interviews similar to those described for Chapter 24. Students might look at
Studs Terkel’s The Good War for some insight into how ordinary men and women saw things.
They should focus on examining how the war shaped people’s lives, whether in uniform or at
home, and how the war affected their communities.
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